What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Printable Version +- Garden And Gossip Forums (https://gardenandgossip.org) +-- Forum: Plots, pots and gardens (https://gardenandgossip.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=36) +--- Forum: Greenhouse/polytunnel chat (https://gardenandgossip.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=40) +--- Thread: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? (/showthread.php?tid=1488) Pages:
1
2
|
What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Proserpina - 23-03-2022 I've never had a greenhouse before and don't really know what can be out there at different times of the year. However, my dining room table (by south facing french doors) can't take any more seedlings so I could really do with moving things either to the greenhouse or outside as soon as possible. My dining room has the heating turned off, but does get warm during the day because of the big windows. I have: Onions (Red Baron, Ailsa Craig, Welsh Bunching) Leeks (not many - had rubbish germination) Cabbages Lettuce/salad mixes (have a container of salad in the greenhouse now, but that was started out there) Tomatoes Sweetpeas Cauliflowers Artichokes Allium (yes, singular - I didn't do well with these!) Zinnias Tomatillos Cucumber Watermelon Lemongrass Radishes Mustard Kohlrabi Chillies Aubergines I'm thinking definitely not the chillies, tomatoes, cucumbers, watermelons, or aubergines. Moving the onions would free up the most space. What do you all think? RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Veggie - 23-03-2022 Think of Mediterranean veg - they need it warmer overnight. Cucurbits like it hot. Think UK veg, = they're hardier. If you think its going to be really cold overnight,. cover them with fleece or some polythene. RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Proserpina - 23-03-2022 So how worried should I be about my hardier seedlings overheating during the day? RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Farendwoman - 23-03-2022 What a lot you’ve got. Lucky you. My zinnia are not sprouting at all. RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Veggie - 23-03-2022 (23-03-2022, 03:06 PM)Proserpina Wrote: So how worried should I be about my hardier seedlings overheating during the day?Do you have an automatic window opener on the GH? Its worth getting one if you haven't. If its forecast to be hot, leave the door/window open. RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Proserpina - 23-03-2022 (23-03-2022, 03:50 PM)Veggie Wrote:An automatic opener is on my long long list of things to get to.(23-03-2022, 03:06 PM)Proserpina Wrote: So how worried should I be about my hardier seedlings overheating during the day?Do you have an automatic window opener on the GH? Its worth getting one if you haven't. If its forecast to be hot, leave the door/window open. Knowing me, the chances that I will go up the garden to open the greenhouse door before I dash to the bus-stop to go to work are pretty low! Not a morning person So an automatic opener is definitely a must. At some point. RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Proserpina - 23-03-2022 (23-03-2022, 03:34 PM)Farendwoman Wrote: What a lot you’ve got. Lucky you.The ones I bought from Lidl are doing really well, but I've not had any luck with the Orange King seeds from the swap just yet. Hoping they just need a little bit longer, but I may have kept them a bit wet. I may try sowing some more if there's nothing doing in the next few days. RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - Mark_Riga - 23-03-2022 Ideally you would put them on staging in the greenhouse as, on the floor, slugs can be a big problem with little seedlings. I've got onions. leeks, brassicas, beetroots and lettuce out.we've had several frosts and I've accidentally left the door open a few nights and they are all coming along nicely. The onions and leek are only like blades of grass in seed trays but I'd like to get them planted out. I did this last year and got a bumper crop of both with not too much effort (sow the seeds, plant out, hoe a couple of times then harvest). RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - SarrissUK - 23-03-2022 To answer your question directly, this is what I'd do: Onions (Red Baron, Ailsa Craig, Welsh Bunching) - greenhouse or outside Leeks (not many - had rubbish germination) - greenhouse or outside Cabbages - greenhouse Lettuce/salad mixes (have a container of salad in the greenhouse now, but that was started out there) - greenhouse Tomatoes - indoors Sweetpeas - no idea Cauliflowers - greenhouse Artichokes - greenhouse Allium (yes, singular - I didn't do well with these!) - greenhouse or outdoors Zinnias - no idea, but I'm guessing greenhouse Tomatillos - indoors Cucumber - indoors definitely Watermelon - indoors definitely Lemongrass - indoors definitely Radishes - out! Mustard - greenhouse Kohlrabi - out Chillies - indoors definitely Aubergines - indoors definitely I haven't got all of these types sowed yet, and I've not grown caulis before, and I am by no means an expert so do tell me if you disagree RE: What can be in an unheated greenhouse? - toomanytommytoes - 24-03-2022 (23-03-2022, 09:39 PM)Proserpina Wrote:Don't blame yourself, it's more likely that I didn't let the flower heads dry out enough or the seed didn't develop properly. Gosh they were a real faff to extract the seed from!(23-03-2022, 03:34 PM)Farendwoman Wrote: What a lot you’ve got. Lucky you.The ones I bought from Lidl are doing really well, but I've not had any luck with the Orange King seeds from the swap just yet. Hoping they just need a little bit longer, but I may have kept them a bit wet. I may try sowing some more if there's nothing doing in the next few days. |